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Jul 11, 2013
07/13
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. >> the number one threat to the environment in california is marijuana growers. the habitat destruction. >> reporter: repairing the environmental damage could take years. robert honda, ktvu, channel 2 news. >>> california is poised to make a major shift in how it executes prisoners. state officials let a deadline pass without filing an appeal of a ruling that prohibits the use of the three drug cocktail used in executions. right now, there are more than 700 inmates on death row in san quentin. the last execution there was in 2006. but after that, a judge ruled that the use of the three drugs amounted to cruel and unusual punishment, because one of the drugs could potentially cause excruciating pain. >>> this is day three of a hunger strike in california prisons. right now, california inmates can be held in isolation indefinitely. the protesters are seeking a five year limit to solitaire confinement. prison officials told ktvu tonight, the number of inmates taking part in that hunger strike has now dropped to roughly 29,000 prisoners. >>> this was a solemn day in
. >> the number one threat to the environment in california is marijuana growers. the habitat destruction. >> reporter: repairing the environmental damage could take years. robert honda, ktvu, channel 2 news. >>> california is poised to make a major shift in how it executes prisoners. state officials let a deadline pass without filing an appeal of a ruling that prohibits the use of the three drug cocktail used in executions. right now, there are more than 700 inmates on...
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Jul 12, 2013
07/13
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KGO
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>> well, arsenic is a mineral that exists in our environment. it's in our soil, our water, our air. they set the limit of ten parts per billion, which is exactly what is allowed in drinking water. that's a safe level. >> are they going to keep testing? how do we know that the limit is kept? >> i talked to the head of the fda yesterday. she said that they're going to do additional testing. what they look for industry will set this as their standard. they'll do their own testing. and fda will come on behind that to make sure they're following up. >> great news for parents out there this morning. rich, thanks very much. >>> now, to the teenagers who helped track down an abducted 5-year-old girl. a 15-year-old and his friend, joining a group of first responders in the search for a missing little girl in pennsylvania, and hunting down the kidnapper. abc's rob nelson has their story for us. >> reporter: one moment, 5-year-old jocelyn rojas was playing in her lancaster, pennsylvania, front yard, thursday afternoon. and then, she was gone. >> it's something you don't wish on anybody. and ho
>> well, arsenic is a mineral that exists in our environment. it's in our soil, our water, our air. they set the limit of ten parts per billion, which is exactly what is allowed in drinking water. that's a safe level. >> are they going to keep testing? how do we know that the limit is kept? >> i talked to the head of the fda yesterday. she said that they're going to do additional testing. what they look for industry will set this as their standard. they'll do their own...
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Jul 10, 2013
07/13
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KGO
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the information and possibly begin to make that link that the destruction and what we've done to the environment does have an impact on our health and well-being and the future of our children. katie: so what should people do if they look at that and they're concerned about the health of their own families? >> well, this is how the map became what it is. because those are people with sharing concerns so what we've done is the map is going to go live. so when people report a problem, it will go on the map live and they're going to create communities around where they live. and so for these people to be able to post those photos, share their stories, connect with another community, we will help link them whether it need to be with the law or their senators or their congress persons or the e.p.a. or state agencies to get them to work together. and so this map helps them have a voice, again, to take control. and what's happening in their own backyard and theyake changes for themselves. because, um, i don't know who else is coming to help them at this point so we're going to try to help them help the
the information and possibly begin to make that link that the destruction and what we've done to the environment does have an impact on our health and well-being and the future of our children. katie: so what should people do if they look at that and they're concerned about the health of their own families? >> well, this is how the map became what it is. because those are people with sharing concerns so what we've done is the map is going to go live. so when people report a problem, it...
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Jul 12, 2013
07/13
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. >> you can't go into environments like this and earn the trust of two boys like this who have needs like this and then just walk away. >> she cared enough to stay and help us out. >> reporter: with that leroy want to college. dartanyon won a spot on the u.s. paralympic judo team. his first call -- >> hey, lisa, i am going to london. i love you too. >> reporter: so lisa and leroy were there in london, cheering and watching as leroy won critical matches and earned a bronze medal. >> i did it, lisa. >> you did it. you did everything. i am so proud of you. >> reporter: next month this remarkable family will be there when leroy graduates from college. >> she is like -- like another mother. me and dartanyon, we're brothers. we're brothers. and she just created the family like she was the missing piece to the family. >> there are angels among us. that's for sure. >> you almost never see a story where someone steps in to help two people are lost in their ways. that is incredible. the fact that she would do that. and the bond that they have created. >> oh, yeah, it is a family in more ways t
. >> you can't go into environments like this and earn the trust of two boys like this who have needs like this and then just walk away. >> she cared enough to stay and help us out. >> reporter: with that leroy want to college. dartanyon won a spot on the u.s. paralympic judo team. his first call -- >> hey, lisa, i am going to london. i love you too. >> reporter: so lisa and leroy were there in london, cheering and watching as leroy won critical matches and earned...
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survivability and we will look at the airport and doing documentation as far as the airport and the environment goes. >> here's some pictures taken by the ntsb overnight of the investigators doing their first sight inspection of the plane. here's a picture of the chairman deborah hersman. i was just in the terminal and some told they they are from los angeles and wait to go help. they are waiting to hear from management what they will do next today. reporting live, abc7 news. >> thank you, matt. we are learning new information this morning about those girls, the two who lost their lives in the crash. hearing from survivors who escaped the burning plane. abc7 news reporter cornell bernard has the latest live in the newsroom. >> carolyn, good morning. the two girls killed were chinese nationals visiting the u.s. for the summer. both students were 16 years old. in fact, one had just turned 16 only ten days ago. they were both part of a school group of 35 students and five teachers visiting the u.s. from china. meantime many survivors of the crash were escorted through the sfo certainly natural by
survivability and we will look at the airport and doing documentation as far as the airport and the environment goes. >> here's some pictures taken by the ntsb overnight of the investigators doing their first sight inspection of the plane. here's a picture of the chairman deborah hersman. i was just in the terminal and some told they they are from los angeles and wait to go help. they are waiting to hear from management what they will do next today. reporting live, abc7 news. >>...
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Jul 13, 2013
07/13
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LINKTV
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. >> we must of this massive destruction to the environment. another trading commodity gets the mainative as rivers start disappearing. >> so much so that land is disappearing fast. he has eight children and has been making charcoal for more than 80 years. he digs up peat and sets it on fire. opportunitiesew here. charcoal is the only way that i can freak -- feed my family. >> that are trying to cut off funding to al-shabbab fighters. this is a resource that is yet to be interrupted. >> there is a dollar tax for every bag of charcoal, and they get $440 -- >>. >> we found evidence that charcoal is still shipped out. the local government here has called for a temporary lifting of the band, to illegally export their current charcoal. they say is too late to save the trees that have already been cut down. al jazeera, somalia. >> hello, a warm welcome to "the journal" on dw. these are the headlines this hour. the united states increases pressure on russia as edward snowden says he wants temporary asylum there. officials blame the devastating train c
. >> we must of this massive destruction to the environment. another trading commodity gets the mainative as rivers start disappearing. >> so much so that land is disappearing fast. he has eight children and has been making charcoal for more than 80 years. he digs up peat and sets it on fire. opportunitiesew here. charcoal is the only way that i can freak -- feed my family. >> that are trying to cut off funding to al-shabbab fighters. this is a resource that is yet to be...
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Jul 10, 2013
07/13
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MSNBC
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i feel like i'm doing my part to help out the environment. >>> last night we told you about reported abuses at california state prisons including the illegal sterilization of female inmates and years of solitary confinement for inmates at pelican bay. today, we learned that an estimated 30,000 prison inmates began refusing meals in the largest prison protest in state history. that protest is part of a coordinated effort across the california prison system to end indefinite solitary confinement. state correction officials will not recognize the protest as a hunger strike until inmates have missed nine consecutive meals. we will continue to follow this story as it develops. on everything from home repair to healthcare written by people just like you. no company can pay to be on angie's list, so you can trust what you're reading. angie's list is like having thousands of close neighbors, where i can go ask for personal recommendations. that's the idea. before you have any work done, check angie's list. find out why more than two million members count on angie's list. angie's list -- revi
i feel like i'm doing my part to help out the environment. >>> last night we told you about reported abuses at california state prisons including the illegal sterilization of female inmates and years of solitary confinement for inmates at pelican bay. today, we learned that an estimated 30,000 prison inmates began refusing meals in the largest prison protest in state history. that protest is part of a coordinated effort across the california prison system to end indefinite solitary...
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Jul 11, 2013
07/13
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it can give consumers a choice and protect the environment. >> debbie i want to go to tyson for context about this. we have a situation where solar is plummeting, and utilities get to control where they're sourcing their power, right? >> right. in addition to that, if you're -- in the utility business, your job is to sell electricity to homes and businesses. the last thing you want is for homes and businesses to become independent power generators by putting solar panels on their roofs. so southern company, it's in their financial interest to block efforts to make buildings and individuals and businesses energy independent. but we need to, the technology is there, and even if a household can't afford to buy expensive solar panels, there are so many companies out there where you can lease the panels. >> no upfront costs. >> and it's cheaper on your utility. >> i want to hammer this home, debbie, i think it's key to your objection. our power that we plug into is centralized in this country. centralized utility. and it means the political power is centralized utilities. the radical promise
it can give consumers a choice and protect the environment. >> debbie i want to go to tyson for context about this. we have a situation where solar is plummeting, and utilities get to control where they're sourcing their power, right? >> right. in addition to that, if you're -- in the utility business, your job is to sell electricity to homes and businesses. the last thing you want is for homes and businesses to become independent power generators by putting solar panels on their...
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Jul 13, 2013
07/13
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i feel like i'm doing my part to help out the environment. vietnam in 1972. [ all ] fort benning, georgia in 1999. [ male announcer ] usaa auto insurance is often handed down from generation to generation. because it offers a superior level of protection and because usaa's commitment to serve military members, veterans, and their families is without equal. begin your legacy, get an auto insurance quote. usaa. we know what it means to serve. so you can capture your receipts, ink for all business purchases. and manage them online with jot, the latest app from ink. so you can spend less time doing paperwork. and more time doing paperwork. ink from chase. so you can. [ herbie ] eh, hold on brent, what's this? mmmm, nice car. there's no doubt, that's definitely gonna throw him off. she's seen it too. oh this could be trouble. [ sentra lock noise ] oh man. gotta think fast, herbie. back pedal, back pedal. [ crowd cheering ] oh, he's down in flames and now the ice-cold shoulder. one last play... no, game over! gps take him to the dog house. [ male a
i feel like i'm doing my part to help out the environment. vietnam in 1972. [ all ] fort benning, georgia in 1999. [ male announcer ] usaa auto insurance is often handed down from generation to generation. because it offers a superior level of protection and because usaa's commitment to serve military members, veterans, and their families is without equal. begin your legacy, get an auto insurance quote. usaa. we know what it means to serve. so you can capture your receipts, ink for all business...
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Jul 12, 2013
07/13
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FOXNEWSW
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the overall our mission is to provide a safe and secure environment for the entire community. june 10th, members of our community walked into this courthouse has the potential jurors. just like people throughout the country do in our 3,000 plus counties. once seated, these individuals will decide cases in controversial in their respective jurisdictions and they die it under the watchful eye of a presiding judge. now, for 15 days, this jury has heard from witnesses. they have viewed evidence. they have learned the facts. they have been instructed on the laws that apply, and now they are deliberating. and soon, hopefully, they will issue a verdict. as americans we entrust our fellow citizens with this solemn duty in exchange we, the public, respect and accept their decision. now, at times, as individuals, we may not agree with this verdict, but at communities within our country we respect the rule of law. before i turn the podium over to chief smith, i would like too speak to what i see in our community. we recognize, while this case has brought a great deal of emotion, there's
the overall our mission is to provide a safe and secure environment for the entire community. june 10th, members of our community walked into this courthouse has the potential jurors. just like people throughout the country do in our 3,000 plus counties. once seated, these individuals will decide cases in controversial in their respective jurisdictions and they die it under the watchful eye of a presiding judge. now, for 15 days, this jury has heard from witnesses. they have viewed evidence....
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Jul 14, 2013
07/13
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in a hospital environment there are many things that healthcare providers are trying to prioritize. unfortunately sometimes nutrition is lower on the list. so we need to change that. >> shannon: how can nutrition impact whatever you're healing from when you're at the hospital, you've had a surgery, you have a bug, whatever complication you have, how does that factor into your healing process? >> so the bottom line is that malnourished patients do less well. we have increased levels of complications, increased lengths of stay. and higher readmission rates. ultimately what this results in is poor outcomes for patients and increased costs for all of us. >> shannon: when you have to be readmitted. that's all kinds of additional costs as you mentioned. there are a lot of things that will be complicated in the new healthcare law, too, for hospitals when they have quick readmissions of patients. >> absolutely. >> shannon: what can we do to solve the problem? how does this get addressed? >> okay. there are a few things that we with the alliance to advance patient nutrition want to advocate
in a hospital environment there are many things that healthcare providers are trying to prioritize. unfortunately sometimes nutrition is lower on the list. so we need to change that. >> shannon: how can nutrition impact whatever you're healing from when you're at the hospital, you've had a surgery, you have a bug, whatever complication you have, how does that factor into your healing process? >> so the bottom line is that malnourished patients do less well. we have increased levels...
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Jul 7, 2013
07/13
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now all of a sudden you are getting in the landing environment and starting to bleed off that air speed. the air speed goes below the target air speed, next thing she said was a stick shaker sound was on. stick shaker literally shakes the stick of the airplane to get the pilot's attention that you are about to enter a stall speed. what happened is, it sounds like they are coming downhill. they are bleeding off air speed the throttles are back at idle, they bleed off too much air speed. now, they realize they are low and flat. stick shaker is going off. somebody in cockpit, go around, go around, let's get out of here. they throw the throttles up but it takes so long for those engines to spool back you they impacted the ground and shattered the tail off the aaron. at that point --. >> gregg: i've got 90 seconds before a break. why would this happen? is this pilot error? >> it is starting to shape up as pilot error. yes. throat sl colonel coming down. we talked about this before. when you do an approach, open ocean or over a large body of water and you are looking ahead and you can physica
now all of a sudden you are getting in the landing environment and starting to bleed off that air speed. the air speed goes below the target air speed, next thing she said was a stick shaker sound was on. stick shaker literally shakes the stick of the airplane to get the pilot's attention that you are about to enter a stall speed. what happened is, it sounds like they are coming downhill. they are bleeding off air speed the throttles are back at idle, they bleed off too much air speed. now,...
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Jul 7, 2013
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every way we can to preserve a more calm atmosphere as they try to move through this very treacherous environment right now. >> the military has to make clear what their timetable is. and they have to move to be inclusive. one of the problems with morsi, he was increasingly exclusive. he was increasingly authoritarian. and that view is not going to work for the people of egypt, nor is it going to work for the united states. >> and joining me now, john roberts, in for chris wallace this week on fox news sunday. good to see you, john. >> good morning. good to see you, too. it's been a while. >> we had double boxes yesterday with the pro-morsi and the anti-morsi protesters. and the crowds may be a little less today. nevertheless, a lot of people there on both sides. where do these folks see this going? >> well, i mean, the only thing right now that's certain about egypt is the uncertainty as to where this is going. and you just don't know. will there be more violence like there was on friday? will elements of the muslim brotherhood and islamic militants take a greater hand in protesting what has hap
every way we can to preserve a more calm atmosphere as they try to move through this very treacherous environment right now. >> the military has to make clear what their timetable is. and they have to move to be inclusive. one of the problems with morsi, he was increasingly exclusive. he was increasingly authoritarian. and that view is not going to work for the people of egypt, nor is it going to work for the united states. >> and joining me now, john roberts, in for chris wallace...
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Jul 8, 2013
07/13
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of this, this may -- irony of this, this may lead to more emissions of carbon and methane into the environment than if we hadn't done these regulations. gregg: and higher costs for consumersesome. >> no doubt about that. the biggest concern is not so much prices, but they will be affected, it's jobs. a lot of people in the coal mining industry, a lot of people in the manufacturing sector, and these are union jobs, by the way, gregg. very worried about what's going to happen to their job if we increase the prices and put, you know, one of the effects of this will be, essentially, to put coal mining out of business. gregg: all right. stephen moore, as always, thank you very much. >> thank you, gregg. gregg: in the meantime, new numbers showing president obama's approval rating has taken a serious dive since his re-election. coming up, we're going to speak with brit hume about what's really behind this decline. >>> plus, the defense in the george zimmerman trial getting its first full day right now on the witness stand a former coworker of zimmerman. the trial is streaming in full on foxnews.com.
of this, this may -- irony of this, this may lead to more emissions of carbon and methane into the environment than if we hadn't done these regulations. gregg: and higher costs for consumersesome. >> no doubt about that. the biggest concern is not so much prices, but they will be affected, it's jobs. a lot of people in the coal mining industry, a lot of people in the manufacturing sector, and these are union jobs, by the way, gregg. very worried about what's going to happen to their job...
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Jul 8, 2013
07/13
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CNNW
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when they talked about a high-risk environment, i think they were talking about this. it's good. halfway back to tripoli, the magnificent ruins of leptis magna. arguably the most intact remains of a roman city in the world. it's worth noting that the emperor of rome was himself libyan. that's pretty amazing. born right here. someone chipped off all of the dicks, not that i was looking. anywhere else in the world is overrun with tourists, but, look, no one. you're free to wander as you wish. quite a backdrop, you know, seeing a little dinner theater production of "our town" a couple thousand years ago. not bad. the only other visitors today are a troupe of libyan boy scouts. bizarrely enough, gadhafi himself was once a scout and this was one of the only organizations allowed to remain independent of the government. maybe i ought to go down there and introduce myself to the former comrades and exchange some boy scout lore. yes, yes, i was once a boy scout, too. hello. drilled into their heads is something that was long ago drilled into mine. i promise to be trustworthy, loyal, help
when they talked about a high-risk environment, i think they were talking about this. it's good. halfway back to tripoli, the magnificent ruins of leptis magna. arguably the most intact remains of a roman city in the world. it's worth noting that the emperor of rome was himself libyan. that's pretty amazing. born right here. someone chipped off all of the dicks, not that i was looking. anywhere else in the world is overrun with tourists, but, look, no one. you're free to wander as you wish....
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Jul 14, 2013
07/13
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everybody cares about the environment but they care about their personal environment remember reagan said people are part of the ecosystem, too and this balanced record he presented, i think, provides great hope for the future, and that's why people need to learn the less-lesson. if you love reagan, you'll love "sage brush rebel." >> thank you very much. [applause] >> what are you reading? >> i have a couple of good books. i keep going back and fort to different ones. 1861, about the first year of the civil war. and 1863 now and what's happening in gettysburg, we just covered that battle. but getting a sense of what was happening during 1861, the first shots fired at fort sumpter, and all the behind the scenes going on there at the time. what was happening around the country as it pertained to slavery and other issues, obviously, and during that time as well, leading up to the emancipation proclamation. and the lincoln administration. fast floating, about 100 years of fire and rain, great book about 1969 and 1970, about the breakup of the beatles. about the emergence of james taylor,
everybody cares about the environment but they care about their personal environment remember reagan said people are part of the ecosystem, too and this balanced record he presented, i think, provides great hope for the future, and that's why people need to learn the less-lesson. if you love reagan, you'll love "sage brush rebel." >> thank you very much. [applause] >> what are you reading? >> i have a couple of good books. i keep going back and fort to different...
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Jul 13, 2013
07/13
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when you grow up in a poor environment and an unsafe environment and when your family doesn't have a whole lot of resources it's very easy to make excuses. it's very easy to say i can do this, i can't do that and i can't go places because my family simply hasn't provided for me. or you know my people are oppressed. don't make any excuses for yourself. that is step number one. step number two, don't lay mothers. there are certainly bad people out there and there are always going to be people who don't necessarily wish you well but there are so many people who will always be there to lend a hand, and if you have the right attitude people will help you. people will give you a break but you have to start by not blaming others. what i saw so often in the ghetto was that people started blaming others, blaming history. pretty soon you become quite self-destructive. the key is to get away from that. and then of course the third thing which really isn't anything new, that one has to work hard. you have to take advantage of the opportunities that you have because more people to have opportunit
when you grow up in a poor environment and an unsafe environment and when your family doesn't have a whole lot of resources it's very easy to make excuses. it's very easy to say i can do this, i can't do that and i can't go places because my family simply hasn't provided for me. or you know my people are oppressed. don't make any excuses for yourself. that is step number one. step number two, don't lay mothers. there are certainly bad people out there and there are always going to be people who...
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Jul 14, 2013
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in other words, if you know what your career is going to be your better off in a trade environment or a high-tech business, is college really worth it statistically speaking? >> i think that is one of the great calculations of becoming an not to be york. am i going to forego this experience to do that one? life is often the best teacher of those things. in that thing that is absolutely true when it comes to starting a business and building a business and things like that. you looked at steve jobs and bill gates, really there was no value added for them of college. i'm sure there are thousands of individuals across the country who said the same thing about themselves and at the next big idea and maybe it didn't pan out so in one sense, it absolutely might be a great fall back if your idea doesn't work out and you can go be a computer programmer at apple or whenever and have a great career. you might not be the next great silicon valley entrepreneur. it's a provincial calculation. >> a couple of things. we do talk about the book. i don't know how much of a model it is for our many peopl
in other words, if you know what your career is going to be your better off in a trade environment or a high-tech business, is college really worth it statistically speaking? >> i think that is one of the great calculations of becoming an not to be york. am i going to forego this experience to do that one? life is often the best teacher of those things. in that thing that is absolutely true when it comes to starting a business and building a business and things like that. you looked at...
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Jul 14, 2013
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that could thrive outside of the traditional college environment this. is not for everyone and it is for a few. and remember most entrepreneurs will not really succeed this. is a high risk venture. >> it is probably true here, at aggregate with the entrepreneurial adventures is the aggregate. some people will have to be able to make it big. bill. go ahead. >> we have the curve here. actually the bell curve. any standard will work ill to be conjoined with that and any standard will work ill and not to be much use if you pose universal genius. the zuckerberg, gates. jobs. it works anyway. madison did not learn at all. princeton. madison knew a lot and read a lot. the book is not written for those folks. arguably, i think based on the evidence of what i could tell from reading the jobs book and the other pro files of successful people. issue live in a ranch house in california use your garage to play the guitar or invent machines and you will make it much more likely than college. >> i this i that may be true. questions here? just kidding. >> my name is fat
that could thrive outside of the traditional college environment this. is not for everyone and it is for a few. and remember most entrepreneurs will not really succeed this. is a high risk venture. >> it is probably true here, at aggregate with the entrepreneurial adventures is the aggregate. some people will have to be able to make it big. bill. go ahead. >> we have the curve here. actually the bell curve. any standard will work ill to be conjoined with that and any standard will...
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Jul 14, 2013
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three different things outside the store and on the staff, and it just makes for an incredibly rich environment. christine at words in green point, the folks who opened green light bookstore, huge two-year fundraising campaign involved the borough president, involved, you know, the community, developed a huge measure of support. i mean, this is the sort of leadership that's arriving these days. i want to very quickly say that there are some continuing threats. i think the biggest problem for independent retailers and retailers of any kind is a lack of access to money. the banks rolled up everybody's lines of credit when the real estate market imploded. you know, people have been punctilious about paying their notes, suddenly couldn't get their inventory financed. it didn't help that publishers lowered the boom on stores demanding earlier payment of more. i think we talked about predatory real estate, a lot of real estate being jacked up beyond reason. you know, changes in technology, you know, these folks can talk about it a little bit better. and then the internet. i don't think anybody realiz
three different things outside the store and on the staff, and it just makes for an incredibly rich environment. christine at words in green point, the folks who opened green light bookstore, huge two-year fundraising campaign involved the borough president, involved, you know, the community, developed a huge measure of support. i mean, this is the sort of leadership that's arriving these days. i want to very quickly say that there are some continuing threats. i think the biggest problem for...
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Jul 14, 2013
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around with this motto don't the evil and as i said everybody is pretty much uncompromising in this environment and the truth is we all have to exist together and if we don't it is going to threaten everybody's existence. it is enter depended ecology. you can't have libraries without authors. google, whatever it wants to do in sampling copyrighted work, they're going to run out of it eventually view don't have more people writing books. so it ought to be a cooperative venture. to some extent there are people who actually come in and intervene and make this more difficult. the antitrust division of the justice department for example, we settle a big lawsuit with google. the antitrust division comes in and says we don't like it because all the little tiny corner of the market google will have a monopoly. not wrong but a public benefit of getting the content of several major university libraries available to people around the world, many fleas through public library terminals, seems to overwhelm this minor concern of the justice department objective. and that is typical of what seems to be happeni
around with this motto don't the evil and as i said everybody is pretty much uncompromising in this environment and the truth is we all have to exist together and if we don't it is going to threaten everybody's existence. it is enter depended ecology. you can't have libraries without authors. google, whatever it wants to do in sampling copyrighted work, they're going to run out of it eventually view don't have more people writing books. so it ought to be a cooperative venture. to some extent...
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this is a very unforgiving environment. and he had an ax put in his hand almost at once and he had this until about the age 23. one of the great ironies of lincoln's life is that he did not like axes or splitting rails come even though we know him as the rail splitter. he wanted to escape of his unforgiving environment. his mother at a very young age and his aunt and uncle came down with something called milk six. hr would wander off into the forest and would eat poisonous weeds and its milk would become poison. you drink the milk and you would die in indescribably horrible death in about a week. so this happens to his mom, he has to fashion the wood coffin with his father to bury her. there is no one to give the sermon and eventually a minister happen by the area months later. his sister would die in childbirth, which is not uncommon. and lincoln's family was very upset about this stuff. the in-laws didn't do enough to help her, they said well, we wanted to help her, but the nearest doctor was too drunk to help her, which
this is a very unforgiving environment. and he had an ax put in his hand almost at once and he had this until about the age 23. one of the great ironies of lincoln's life is that he did not like axes or splitting rails come even though we know him as the rail splitter. he wanted to escape of his unforgiving environment. his mother at a very young age and his aunt and uncle came down with something called milk six. hr would wander off into the forest and would eat poisonous weeds and its milk...
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you're going to have to find alternatives with a huge impact positively in the environment. >> thank you. next question. >> that's a great answer. thank you, i am with the center for clean air quality. they have a question about how you think about natural capital as far as how you improve the natural fragile economy. so i have not heard much about the capital and how that can help improve the economy. >> question is about how can the natural capital or wetlands help to improve the fragile economy this is something that has happened with poster session. and you know, everyone probably watches this year. it is weird and crunchy. and you can go to their website and it is called we build green cities.com. we protect natural resources. it is a whole network of environmentally friendly companies. given urbanization in china and india, the folks are coming to portland, oregon. this is an example of when you do the right thing. and the sustainable thing. actually gives me expertise we all understand the importance of high research universities and their been universities but they absolute n
you're going to have to find alternatives with a huge impact positively in the environment. >> thank you. next question. >> that's a great answer. thank you, i am with the center for clean air quality. they have a question about how you think about natural capital as far as how you improve the natural fragile economy. so i have not heard much about the capital and how that can help improve the economy. >> question is about how can the natural capital or wetlands help to...
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mexico had become a very tough environment for journalists. i think alfredo will we'll tell you many of his mexican colleagues felt far more vulnerable and exposed in many respects. in a sense there was an additional layer of security. >> you but i mean issuing a statement. >> i don't know if that predated her postdated laredo but there were different times where we had to make very clear that we felt their interests were threatened and we were going to take it seriously. we weren't going to sit back and not say anything. >> alfredo tell us a little bit more about what it was like or how you went about covering the country that you obviously feel very deeply about. you describe having a love affair with mexico and really this book i think the reader will find its part memoir, very personal and those that makes is so beautiful. it's a very captivating and engaging read about a very serious subject. the emotion that you feel for both the united states and mexico comes through very clearly. how do you balance that in a country that has so much op
mexico had become a very tough environment for journalists. i think alfredo will we'll tell you many of his mexican colleagues felt far more vulnerable and exposed in many respects. in a sense there was an additional layer of security. >> you but i mean issuing a statement. >> i don't know if that predated her postdated laredo but there were different times where we had to make very clear that we felt their interests were threatened and we were going to take it seriously. we weren't...
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another question but what about the states that have bullying laws of the internet, schools, different environments what is your feeling about that? >> do think a narrowly drawn bullying law is constitutional. really is protected and will put it this way, we have always said that certain types of speech amounting to threats are not protected by the first amendment with the law calls a true threat to to say that i will kill you the government can play a role with the first amendment if i needed. or if i mean if it is a joke on stage it is something else but there are threats that no one would argue protected by the first amendment but that bullying what can you drafted nearly enough can you avoid the terrible danger of a law that includes kids better to steps farther than they should be in teasing other kids. but i think it bullying was drafted well can be sustained. >>. >> what is the current state of the law where pure speech of racist or sexist nature but not threatening is the basis of a harassment claim in the workplace? >> the answer is unclear. because you rightly pose the question of speech
another question but what about the states that have bullying laws of the internet, schools, different environments what is your feeling about that? >> do think a narrowly drawn bullying law is constitutional. really is protected and will put it this way, we have always said that certain types of speech amounting to threats are not protected by the first amendment with the law calls a true threat to to say that i will kill you the government can play a role with the first amendment if i...
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this is a very unforgiving environment. lincoln said he had an axe put in the happened almost at once and handled that most useful instrument until about the age 23. one of the great irony of lincoln's life is that he didn't like axes. he didn't like splitting rails. even though we know him as the rail splitter. he wanted to escape this unforgiving environment. his mother, at the very young age, and aunt and uncle came down with something called milk sick. a cow would wander to the forest. eat poison weeds. the milk would become poisoned. you would drink the milk and die a horrible death in a week. it happens to his mom about 8 or so. he has to fashion the wood coffin with his father to bury her. there's no one to give the sermon. eventually someone, a minister happened by the area, you know, months later, and his sister would die in childbirth, which was not uncommon, and lincoln's family of upset about this. thought the inlaws didn't do enough to help her. the inlaws said, we wanted to help her, but the nearest doctor was
this is a very unforgiving environment. lincoln said he had an axe put in the happened almost at once and handled that most useful instrument until about the age 23. one of the great irony of lincoln's life is that he didn't like axes. he didn't like splitting rails. even though we know him as the rail splitter. he wanted to escape this unforgiving environment. his mother, at the very young age, and aunt and uncle came down with something called milk sick. a cow would wander to the forest. eat...
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lincoln told a story in the white house thattured what -- captured what the educational environment was like. he said there was a school room of kids and reading from the book of danielle, you have 0st cast your mind back when it was legal to read the bible in the school room in america, and they are reading from the book and the one boy stumbles over the name. boom, hit up against the head. .. rode up in a carriage with their luggage and there was a ski boat and they wanted to meet but there was no war so they wanted lincoln to roll them out there. he willingly does this, helps them with their luggage and when they are getting on the steamboat he says you forgot to pay me. he throws a silver dollar in the boat and says all those years later in the white house he says i realize that that moment i have earned my first dollar. he opened up to him and was a.m. optimist hopeful being. so he wanted to skate that isolation and make possible an america where no one had to live in that kind of isolation ever again. in a nut shell that is when he didn't become a democrat. he was surrounded by pe
lincoln told a story in the white house thattured what -- captured what the educational environment was like. he said there was a school room of kids and reading from the book of danielle, you have 0st cast your mind back when it was legal to read the bible in the school room in america, and they are reading from the book and the one boy stumbles over the name. boom, hit up against the head. .. rode up in a carriage with their luggage and there was a ski boat and they wanted to meet but there...
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go back to that environment where was one of the most peaceful spots around the world. in my have green, we were tourists from all over the world were coming to enjoy afghanistan . i as a tour guide would take them where it would be considered a gift of that village. by the way, a country where killing of a person to my every village around afghanistan, that is what they tell people about. we did. our father would tell us. a prayer. oh, somebody has been killed. we will go to there. that is a rear talk about. i want to talk to people about the fact that afghanistan was never our corrupt nation. it is not okay -- the college a corrupt nation today, but corruption. especially in the last 13 of 14 years. when people integrated and went to a neighboring country and is certified, trade ammunition, so people, so as you beings. that is on corruption came. that is when it started. i remember in the place or lived , very well-known as to who you are everyone -- the whole area would be ashamed. today it is the business all over. that's the afghanistan now we know. but the model t
go back to that environment where was one of the most peaceful spots around the world. in my have green, we were tourists from all over the world were coming to enjoy afghanistan . i as a tour guide would take them where it would be considered a gift of that village. by the way, a country where killing of a person to my every village around afghanistan, that is what they tell people about. we did. our father would tell us. a prayer. oh, somebody has been killed. we will go to there. that is a...
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they think today it a different environment. we have issue like these. because of this, we can't be as open to immigration as we were in the past because of the issues. just like the point made in the book it's no different than 100 years ago. there's an intense campaign in the earlier 20th century carried out main by italians and communist who blew up to a dozen bombs across the united. targeting people like the attorney general of the united, and number use other public officials across the country at the time. people had a reaction that the that time. they said we can't have this type of thing. it's at the time when communists were marching across the world and having success in european union and the chaos. these people were seen as an extension that have. we need to close our border to try to block it out. it's no different than what we hear today about islamic terrorism and other issues like that when we take a look at the middle east. but what is even more astonishing is how a lot of our immigration policy makes it easier for national security thr
they think today it a different environment. we have issue like these. because of this, we can't be as open to immigration as we were in the past because of the issues. just like the point made in the book it's no different than 100 years ago. there's an intense campaign in the earlier 20th century carried out main by italians and communist who blew up to a dozen bombs across the united. targeting people like the attorney general of the united, and number use other public officials across the...
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and then you had the environment issue. and it won, the senate dropped it. stunned howard baker. i mean, he wasn't ready for the vote. that was 1983. >> thanks. >> hey, mark. >> hi. you have been a national figure, but it's not my character to thank politicians. this is the second straight time i've thanked a politician. olympia snowe for seeing, after being against voting representation then finally voting for it. you have not neglected this place where you live for a long time. there are 630,000 people who don't have a vote. not even statehood, not even autonomy and sovereignty, that i just don't even have a vote. and this is a very accepting populace. i've lived here almost now 50 years, and i came from chicago where we vote metropolitan once on election day -- more than once on election day. [laughter] will you explain the psychology of accommodation and acceptance by really this group of very informed and otherwise enlightened people to accept their second or third class citizenship? and then finally, where is the spark to propel the citizens of the district of columbia to c
and then you had the environment issue. and it won, the senate dropped it. stunned howard baker. i mean, he wasn't ready for the vote. that was 1983. >> thanks. >> hey, mark. >> hi. you have been a national figure, but it's not my character to thank politicians. this is the second straight time i've thanked a politician. olympia snowe for seeing, after being against voting representation then finally voting for it. you have not neglected this place where you live for a long...
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farm, creating different environments and seeing how it slows or is beads or affects the process of decomposition. the reason there are so many of them now is they are cropping up in different ecological, like a dry climate or say a tropical climate so they can learn about the timeline of decomposition in different ecological systems. so there is actually a project going on right now. you can go on her webcam and watch. there is a underwater. they are studying what happens to a body underwater. they have this. you have a webcam that comes on every 15 minutes. i wish i had the link for curious viewers but in fact what tends to happen is in this area anyway a lot of crabs show up because crabs like pork and humans as well. so the crab tend to take care of the body. it's kind of like you know there is that kind of sky burial where the body is put out in the vultures come down. in india by think outside of mumbai there is a place where the bodies are put out. i have never been. but sky burial and there is a seed burial that is similar. let the crabs come in and you become part of the ec
farm, creating different environments and seeing how it slows or is beads or affects the process of decomposition. the reason there are so many of them now is they are cropping up in different ecological, like a dry climate or say a tropical climate so they can learn about the timeline of decomposition in different ecological systems. so there is actually a project going on right now. you can go on her webcam and watch. there is a underwater. they are studying what happens to a body underwater....
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so that's what they're doing at the body farm, looking, creating different environments and seeing how it slows or speeds or effects the process of decomposition. the reason there are so many of them now is that there are, they're cropping up in different ecological -- like a dry climate or a tropical climate. so they can learn about the timeline of decomposition in different ecological systems. so there's actually a project going on right now that you can go on a web cam and watch. there's a pig underwater. they're doing -- they're studying what happens to a body underwart. they've got this -- underwater. they've got this pig be, you've got a web cam that comes on every 15 minutes. in fact, what tends to happen is in this area a lot of crabs show up because crabs, crabs like pork -- and humans as well, as much as humans like crab. so the crabs tend to take care of the body. it's kind of like, you know, there's that kind of burial, sky burial it's called where the body is put out x these vultures come down. in india there's outside of, i think it's outside of mumbai there's a place whe
so that's what they're doing at the body farm, looking, creating different environments and seeing how it slows or speeds or effects the process of decomposition. the reason there are so many of them now is that there are, they're cropping up in different ecological -- like a dry climate or a tropical climate. so they can learn about the timeline of decomposition in different ecological systems. so there's actually a project going on right now that you can go on a web cam and watch. there's a...
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there's been four environment studies on the keystone pipeline. all are clean. we aren't doing it for what reason reason. who knows? >> steve, maybe you know. >> i'm with anwar and keystone pipeline. but with fracking causing earthquakes increighing threefold you'd be careful toing th in cal kpal. >> tracy, go ahead. >> brenda, i think one piece we're missing are state taxes. this piece of the gasoline price is not going away. that will continueo go up. couple that with gasoline prices going up higher than our wages. that's the bottom line. >> gary v, it will have an impact on the economy, don't you think? >> absolutely. you know, i want to get back to the point that jonas was making. you know, while we're doing relatively better than other countries, look, i don't want to compare ourselves to our countries because we can do a lot better right here. we've shown that with a combination of coal, natural gas, oil, shale, oil that we have. we would not need to import one more barrel of oil for the next 500 years. why we're not going down that path when we can lower
there's been four environment studies on the keystone pipeline. all are clean. we aren't doing it for what reason reason. who knows? >> steve, maybe you know. >> i'm with anwar and keystone pipeline. but with fracking causing earthquakes increighing threefold you'd be careful toing th in cal kpal. >> tracy, go ahead. >> brenda, i think one piece we're missing are state taxes. this piece of the gasoline price is not going away. that will continueo go up. couple that with...
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you are taken out of that structured environment and you go off to school or looking for a job and it is not just the military needs worry about it. when you look at the aggregate numbers of unemployment among veterans and you see it is high in unemployment numbers, then you know that there is something wrong about the way we are dealing with veterans in the way we are trying to help the veterans after they finish their service. >> host: back to your book, "the guns at last light: the war in western europe, 1944-1945". it is estimated that in december 1, 8000 american deserters roamed with another 10,000 british. the equivalent of a division of military people were often joining forces with local marketeers to peddle items from his own army trucks. hundreds of such vehicles vanish every day for $5000. >> guest: there was a lot of bad behavior. there is no doubt about it. it is important to recognize that all the brothers were valiant. that is not how human nature works. whether you are you're in the army or out of the army. you know, there were 23,000 deserters in world war ii. thousa
you are taken out of that structured environment and you go off to school or looking for a job and it is not just the military needs worry about it. when you look at the aggregate numbers of unemployment among veterans and you see it is high in unemployment numbers, then you know that there is something wrong about the way we are dealing with veterans in the way we are trying to help the veterans after they finish their service. >> host: back to your book, "the guns at last light:...
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the oil company says it's about saving an environment. >> i say it's all about money. they're only doing it because it's saving them money, that's the bottom line. >> reporter: it would cost job hoffman about $3 million to remove this rig, money he'd rather put into a trust fund to preserve the reef. >> it's a wonderful ocean of mystery and intrigue associated with the ecosystems. >> reporter: the bp disasters and other spills earned a reputation for harm. now they're showing their other side, ujds water worlds brimming with life. chip reid, cbs news off the coast of louisiana. >>> well, coming up after your local news on "cbs morning news," closing arguments today in the george zimmerman trial. we'll get analysis from jack ford. >>> plus, an exclusive look at the last piece of the world trade center standing from 9/11, and it's an important piece of the memorial. >>> and we'll meet with a man recovering from a training accident. that's the "cbs morning news" for this morning. thanks for watching. i'm anne-marie green. have a great day. -- captions by vitac -- www.vita
the oil company says it's about saving an environment. >> i say it's all about money. they're only doing it because it's saving them money, that's the bottom line. >> reporter: it would cost job hoffman about $3 million to remove this rig, money he'd rather put into a trust fund to preserve the reef. >> it's a wonderful ocean of mystery and intrigue associated with the ecosystems. >> reporter: the bp disasters and other spills earned a reputation for harm. now they're...
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. >> as you can imagine it's a very dynamic environment dealing with the rescue and trying to rescue 300 victims. >> reporter: autopsies on the two victims are still pending. it could be several weeks before we know what caused the 16-year-old's death. the crash itself, the fire truck or both. reporting live in san francisco, melanie woodrow, anne-marie, back to you. >> melanie, thank you. >>> tropical storm chantal is on the move. it's expected to hit the lesser antilles today. winds are at 50 miles per hour. cbs meteorologist david bernard takes a look at where the storm is headed. >> i think we should begin looking at the computer models for chantal. that will give us an idea where it's heading in the next 24 hours. the next stop will be haiti and the dominican republic. that will be on wednesday. now, if the storm survives moving over the big portion of those islands, perhaps even cuba, near saturday, the storm could be south florida or further east over the bahamas, we have two sets of models indicating that. it's too soon to say which one will be correct. in the meantime, chant
. >> as you can imagine it's a very dynamic environment dealing with the rescue and trying to rescue 300 victims. >> reporter: autopsies on the two victims are still pending. it could be several weeks before we know what caused the 16-year-old's death. the crash itself, the fire truck or both. reporting live in san francisco, melanie woodrow, anne-marie, back to you. >> melanie, thank you. >>> tropical storm chantal is on the move. it's expected to hit the lesser...
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general, governor prosecutor he was ahead of the curve on wall street protected low wage workers on environment. there's a record there i hope they will look to and say, yes, the controller's position is one that fits his skill set and we hope we can bring him back in for public service. >> when did you make this decision? >> very recently. >> like what? >> over this past weekend. this is as you can imagine, a difficult decision. it reopens all these decisions. i'm sitting here imposing on my family -- >> you're making a very late entry into the controller's race. to what degree has the situation with former congressman anthony weiner, who is now running for mayor of new york. he left in disgrace similarly. he's now leading the polls for mayor of new york. did you look at that and say i may have a shot here. >> i think we all know when you speak to people there is forgiveness in the public. whether that forgiveness will extend to any individual is always a separate, individual question. i will have to make a case very different than any other person has made. i expect i will make it every day b
general, governor prosecutor he was ahead of the curve on wall street protected low wage workers on environment. there's a record there i hope they will look to and say, yes, the controller's position is one that fits his skill set and we hope we can bring him back in for public service. >> when did you make this decision? >> very recently. >> like what? >> over this past weekend. this is as you can imagine, a difficult decision. it reopens all these decisions. i'm...
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and they're cared for in a clean, safe environment. no other chicken company does this. but we believe this is what it takes to bring your family a tastier, more tender chicken. perdue. we believe in a better chicken. ♪ >>> aisha tyler is an actress and a comedian and the co-host of the cbs daytime show "the talk." now, she's got a new book. it's called "self-inflicted wounds heartwarming tales of epic humiliation." good morning. you went to dartmouth, but you admit in this book you did a lot of not so smart things in your life. one of those is you got drunk before the s.a.t.s, what happened? >> the hubris of youth. you have this bulletproofness, impervious to outside influences. like many, it started with a boy. i thought it would be fun to go to the beach. luckily, i had already taken the s.a.t. once. that was my second pass. i did pretty well in the first one. i slept through the second one that was the one i throughout. >> you made it to dartmouth? >> i had great extracurriculars. a black female white water rafting guide for blind kids is a shoo-in anywhere you go.
and they're cared for in a clean, safe environment. no other chicken company does this. but we believe this is what it takes to bring your family a tastier, more tender chicken. perdue. we believe in a better chicken. ♪ >>> aisha tyler is an actress and a comedian and the co-host of the cbs daytime show "the talk." now, she's got a new book. it's called "self-inflicted wounds heartwarming tales of epic humiliation." good morning. you went to dartmouth, but you...
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. >> if you're looking at the federal government and faa cut being back funds in this environment now and the sequester, it would be an uphill battle to have them outfit airports all over the country with video cameras. >> i have a time issue here. if you can, what happens next? ntsb will be looking at this video, no doubt. >> well, they'll look at this video. they'll take all of that and correlate with voice recorder and data recorder. when you get through, it will be a story that will be complete. >> thank you, fellows. don't go anywhere. we'll talk more about this exclusive new video of the crash and what the ntsb had to say about the investigation so far. that will happen at the top of the hour. first, a big men's final at wimbledon. >>> this is a big story this hour. the crash landing of flight 214 in san francisco. cnn has exclusive video of the plane coming in and making a crash landing and an exclusive interview with the man who shot this video. we want to get other news in here quickly for you. we'll talk about britain. britons are beaming wildly today. andy murray won the me
. >> if you're looking at the federal government and faa cut being back funds in this environment now and the sequester, it would be an uphill battle to have them outfit airports all over the country with video cameras. >> i have a time issue here. if you can, what happens next? ntsb will be looking at this video, no doubt. >> well, they'll look at this video. they'll take all of that and correlate with voice recorder and data recorder. when you get through, it will be a story...
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because it was pursued in a very insecure environment. three, consult. this was what the iraqis said to me over and over again that the united states did not do. the prime minister said 52 billion should have brought us more, if you had consulted with us about what we really needed at the outset, then we would have benefited from your -- from your investment, your substantial investment. consultation also was an issue that the u.s. interviewees raised. bill burns, secretary of state, said we tried to do it all and tried to do it our own way. and in recognition that from the outside that the c.p.a., the coalition provisional authority, the u.s.-led governance of iraq for the first 14 months, did not engage sufficiently with the iraqis about what they really needed. fourth, uniformity. there was a lack of uniform systems in iraq. agencies operated in their stovepipes, carrying out their missions, using their own contracting approaches, using their own oversight methods, using their own i.t. systems. and as a result, you had stovepiped data. and when you ha
because it was pursued in a very insecure environment. three, consult. this was what the iraqis said to me over and over again that the united states did not do. the prime minister said 52 billion should have brought us more, if you had consulted with us about what we really needed at the outset, then we would have benefited from your -- from your investment, your substantial investment. consultation also was an issue that the u.s. interviewees raised. bill burns, secretary of state, said we...
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so i think there was a long period of time where we did have a calm global financial environment over a long time. i suspect we won't forget that lesson for quite a while. >> the passage of the federal reserve act was a essential political achievement. given the political tone in washington today, if the federal reserve act had been a victim how do you think it would differ from the existing legislation and could it be passed. >> well, it would be more than one federal reserve bank. that is my answer. [laughter] >> okay. on that know, my question is a legacy question. at some point, and i'm not going to ask you when you think this might be, but your time as chair will conclude there is an interchange on i-95 which is named the ben bernanke interchange. [laughter] i will challenge anyone even in the matter. [laughter] and would you like to see people focusing on the contribution? >> well, that is going to be yet to be determined. in the last eight or nine years, the federal reserve has made significant strides in that area. as i mentioned the press conference of a numerical objective w
so i think there was a long period of time where we did have a calm global financial environment over a long time. i suspect we won't forget that lesson for quite a while. >> the passage of the federal reserve act was a essential political achievement. given the political tone in washington today, if the federal reserve act had been a victim how do you think it would differ from the existing legislation and could it be passed. >> well, it would be more than one federal reserve bank....
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Jul 12, 2013
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almost all of these environments are less amenable than others, such as in southeast asia. others have become sights of resuscitation such as in iraq and north africa or the expansion such nasir ya and -- syria, mali, mauritania. al qaeda has recall caddized persons who are citizens of and residents in the united states and canada and inspiring and motivating them to engauge in terrorist acts whether on their own, such as oaccord in fort hood in 2009, or at the direction and behest of al qaeda senior leadership, such as the plot to stage suicide attacks on in the new york city subway in 2009, and the more recent plot in canada that wag was reportedly orchestrated by al qaeda commanders based in iran. the continuing challenge that the united states will face is that al qaeda's core ideology remains attractive both to a hard core radicals and also capable of drawing new at minorities into its ranks. al-awlaki is still a recruiter, and then the tsarnaev brothers, products of the violence in chechneya and roche. and the violence on women and children around the world is a salie
almost all of these environments are less amenable than others, such as in southeast asia. others have become sights of resuscitation such as in iraq and north africa or the expansion such nasir ya and -- syria, mali, mauritania. al qaeda has recall caddized persons who are citizens of and residents in the united states and canada and inspiring and motivating them to engauge in terrorist acts whether on their own, such as oaccord in fort hood in 2009, or at the direction and behest of al qaeda...
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Jul 6, 2013
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it is all male, it is a hothouse environment. .. it. >> this is from an e-mail. >> i have always had an unanswered question about the d-day invasion in know there was plenty of intelligence covering all aspects of our release we perplexed that the allies were so unprepared for the headwind that increase casualty. do you have any insight? >> guest: thinks for the good question is perplexing. part of the issue is so much attention is paid to getting across the beaches and receive this with the year earlier invasions of with africa, sicily, the ball game initially is just a foothold and consequently what comes next in the case of normandy, yes, i read about how there are studies that recognize the american part of the invasion has a topographical oddity by farmers clearing fields and pushing rocks and debris than the wall would grow fines and trees and they are in penetrable that it reminds of the jungle of the south pacific even though there was a knowledge of this type of terrain, there had not been sufficient thinking by those who s
it is all male, it is a hothouse environment. .. it. >> this is from an e-mail. >> i have always had an unanswered question about the d-day invasion in know there was plenty of intelligence covering all aspects of our release we perplexed that the allies were so unprepared for the headwind that increase casualty. do you have any insight? >> guest: thinks for the good question is perplexing. part of the issue is so much attention is paid to getting across the beaches and...